PURPOSE: To report a case of Pseudomonas aeruginosa endophthalmitis with choroidal abscess formation in a patient with bronchiectasis. METHODS: Case report. RESULTS: A 75-year-old gentleman with bronchiectasis and P. aeruginosa pneumonia developed painless loss of right eye vision. The patient had previously undergone bronchoscopy to exclude pulmonary neoplasm. Slit-lamp examination revealed intense anterior chamber inflammation with hypopyon and B-scan ophthalmic ultrasound showed a choroidal mass consistent with choroidal abscess. Systemic and topical antibiotics did not prevent further progression of the infection. Patient declined pars plana vitrectomy and opted for enucleation. Polymerase-chain-reaction-based restriction fragment-length polymorphism (PCR-RFLP) of the enucleated eye confirmed P. aeruginosa to be the causative organism. CONCLUSION: P. aeruginosa cannot be completely eradicated by systemic antibiotics, and bronchial colonization of P. aeruginosa can remain a potential source for metastatic infection. P. aeruginosa choroidal abscess, previously reported only in patients with cystic fibrosis, can also occur in bronchiectasis. Physicians should therefore have a high index of suspicion of endogenous endophthalmitis and treat aggressively, especially in patients with subretinal invasion and abscess formation.
PURPOSE: To report a case of Pseudomonas aeruginosa endophthalmitis with choroidal abscess formation in a patient with bronchiectasis. METHODS: Case report. RESULTS: A 75-year-old gentleman with bronchiectasis and P. aeruginosa pneumonia developed painless loss of right eye vision. The patient had previously undergone bronchoscopy to exclude pulmonary neoplasm. Slit-lamp examination revealed intense anterior chamber inflammation with hypopyon and B-scan ophthalmic ultrasound showed a choroidal mass consistent with choroidal abscess. Systemic and topical antibiotics did not prevent further progression of the infection. Patient declined pars plana vitrectomy and opted for enucleation. Polymerase-chain-reaction-based restriction fragment-length polymorphism (PCR-RFLP) of the enucleated eye confirmed P. aeruginosa to be the causative organism. CONCLUSION:P. aeruginosa cannot be completely eradicated by systemic antibiotics, and bronchial colonization of P. aeruginosa can remain a potential source for metastatic infection. P. aeruginosa choroidal abscess, previously reported only in patients with cystic fibrosis, can also occur in bronchiectasis. Physicians should therefore have a high index of suspicion of endogenous endophthalmitis and treat aggressively, especially in patients with subretinal invasion and abscess formation.
Authors: J Angrill; C Agustí; R de Celis; A Rañó; J Gonzalez; T Solé; A Xaubet; R Rodriguez-Roisin; A Torres Journal: Thorax Date: 2002-01 Impact factor: 9.139
Authors: William W Motley; James J Augsburger; Robert K Hutchins; Susan Schneider; Thomas F Boat Journal: Retina Date: 2005 Feb-Mar Impact factor: 4.256